Friday, February 18, 2011

Bon Voyage!

89 years ago today, Geneva Porter and her husband Peter embarked on a 4 month cruise (February to June, 1922) on board the RMS Adriatic. At the time, cruises such as this were a posh affair and often made the New York Times as social news with lists of prominent travelers. The Rare Book Room of the Buffalo and Erie County Public Library is privileged to hold Geneva's diary of her grand tour. Entries range from the quality of the food on the cruise to rich descriptions of landscapes and vistas. Joined by good friends and local notables Paul and Penn Schoellkopf, the Porters toured Algiers, Gibraltar, Egypt, France, Belgium, and Italy. Below is an image and transcription of Geneva's diary from February 18, 1922. Subscribe to this blog or check back often to read more entries from her diaries.  Can't wait?  Click here to read all of Geneva's entries regarding her 1922 trip.

Adriatic. 1922. Saturday 18 February.  What a hurry!  And what fun and excitement in the farewells on an ocean liner just about to start.  Everybody feel a bit queerly watching the Statue of Liberty disappear in the distance.  We certainly have been loaded down with presints [sic] of all sorts.  We found some Buffalonian on board.  Pete also some New York friends.  We are all sitting together- 3 children, governess, etc.  The food is very good.  It is so cold Penn and I have decided to stay in our rooms today.  Paul and Pete have gone for a swim.  It seemed very funny having wine with our dinner.  As we were at table, the new boat Paris passed.  We sat in the lounge and smoked after dinner.  We went up to the bar for beer before bed then Pete and I took a walk in the moonlight.



Monday, February 14, 2011

The Oddities of H. Phelps Clawson

Phelps was a skilled photographer and took hundreds of photographs when he traveled.  With a sharp eye for the unique, here are a few of the more unusual sites he captured.


Passengers playing cricket on board the Dunottar Castle ocean liner, 1911.
 
GIANT termite nest near Juiz de Fora, Minas Gerais.  Brazil, December 1941.


Offerings for the Devil at the base of a tree. Bahia, Brazil 1941.  Below are Phelps' diary entries describing the custom.


From bottom of page:
"Tree on the road with offerings for the Exir (the Devil).  
Dish of Indian corn, a number of cigars, a piece of meat,...


"...jaw of an animal, several pots (now broken) bits of colored cloth.  All there lay at roots of tree.  Sometimes a goat or cock are left.  A man wants something.  He summons the Exir who may appear as a hen, a chicken, a pig, etc.  The fifth time he comes as the Devil.  The bargain is made then for a price (money, a goat, a cow (rarely) or the man's soul.  Then he gets his desire."

Want to learn more?  Read H. Phelps Clawson's Brazil diary here.